Title 34 › Subtitle Subtitle I— Comprehensive Acts › Chapter 111— JUVENILE JUSTICE AND DELINQUENCY PREVENTION › Subchapter III— RUNAWAY AND HOMELESS YOUTH › Part F— General Provisions › § 11279
Sets plain meanings for words used about programs for runaway and homeless youth. "Drug abuse education and prevention services" means help to stop illegal drug use by runaway and homeless youth and can include counseling, drop-in services, outreach in rural areas, training for staff, and efforts to improve local prevention programs. "Home-based services" means help given to youth and their families to prevent separation or to reunite youth, usually offered in the family home and including intensive counseling and life-skills or parenting training. "Homeless" means a youth who meets the age rules (generally under 21; under 18 for some shelter centers unless a State allows a higher age) and, for part B, must be at least 16 and either under 22 or 22 or older only at the end of an allowed stay that began before age 22 (see section 11222(a)(2)), and who cannot live safely with a relative and has no other safe place to stay. "Runaway" means a person under 18 who leaves home or legal residence without a parent's or guardian's permission. "Street-based services" are services brought to places where these youth gather to help with housing choices and behavior; they may include outreach, crisis counseling, housing and health referrals, and prevention or advocacy about drugs, sexual exploitation, STDs (including HIV), and assault. "Street youth" means a runaway or homeless youth who spends a lot of time on the street or in risky places that raise the chance of sexual abuse, exploitation, prostitution, or drug problems. "Transitional living youth project" means a program that gives shelter and services to help youth move toward independent living and avoid long-term dependence on public assistance. "Youth at risk of separation from the family" means someone under 18 who has run away before, whose caregiver will not meet basic needs, or who faces possible entry into child welfare or juvenile justice because the family lacks needed services.
Full Legal Text
Navy — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
34 U.S.C. § 11279
Title 34 — Navy
Last Updated
Apr 5, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60